•
116m
Calle Malaga
Book Tickets
No upcoming sessions
Synopsis
María Ángeles (Carmen Maura) is a fiercely independent senior living in the Spanish quarter of Tangier. When her daughter Clara (Marta Etura) arrives for a long-overdue visit, she comes with an agenda: to pressure María into selling the home — left in Clara’s name by her late father — to offset her own post-divorce financial struggles. But María, deeply embedded in her community and cherished by her neighbours, quietly resolves to stay.
Determined not to be displaced, she devises a resourceful plan to earn enough money to keep the apartment and buy back the cherished belongings her daughter hastily sold to an antique dealer in preparation for the sale of the property. In the process, María unexpectedly finds a romantic spark with someone she once viewed as an adversary.
Moroccan director Maryam Touzani’s third feature and Spanish-language debut, following the acclaimed The Blue Caftan, takes audiences on a surprising journey that is heartwarming, sensual, and gently humorous. Maura, a legend of Spanish cinema and frequent collaborator with Pedro Almodóvar, delivers a performance that is both affable and defiant. She leads a colourful ensemble of characters who find themselves enlisted in María’s quiet rebellion against the notion that growing means giving up on passion, dreams, or dignity.
Spanish language with English subtitles.
FESTIVALS & AWARDS
Winner: Audience Award | 2025 Venice Film Festival
Official Selection | 2025 Toronto International Film Festival
Screening at Luna Leederville, Luna on SX, and the Windsor from April 23.
Opening Date
Thursday, Apr 23, 2026
Rating
M
Length
116m
Genre
New Release
Reviews
A reminder to savor the days we have in the places and communities we hold dear.
Thanks to a deeply affectionate turn from Carmen Maura, Maryam Touzani’s Calle Málaga will tug at your heartstrings and perhaps break you into a million pieces until you are renewed by a feeling of hope and tenderness.
A sweet star showcase that belongs unequivocally to the incandescent Maura, whose earthy naturalness, sly humor and tenacious spirit feed a direct link back to her Almodóvarian glory days.
Maryam Touzani‘s gentle, toasty-warm later-life drama is an ode to the physical spaces that sustain us, and quite winning as such.










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